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See also: Military History
Antiquity
Middle Ages Theodoric the Great (King of Ostrogoths and ruler of Italy ) Songtsen Gampo (Tibetan warrior king) Charles Martel (Mayor of the Palace of the Kingdom of the Franks ) Charlemagne (King of the Franks, and Holy Roman Emperor) King William I of England (Duke of Normandy , also known as William the Conqueror) General Belisarius (Byzantine general during the reign of Justinian I ) Narses (Another great general in service of Justinian I) Mundus (another general under Justinian) Topiltzin Ce Acatl Quetzalcoatl Toltec leader and conqueror Basil II Byzantine emperor George Maniaces (11th century Byzantine general) Nicephorus Botaniates (11th century Byzantine general, later emperor) Nicephorus Bryennius (11th century Byzantine general) Taticius (11th century Byzantine general) Robert Guiscard (Norman conqueror of Naples and S. Sicily) Godfrey of Bouillon (leader of the First Crusade ) Baldwin of Boulogne (leader of the First Crusade) Baldwin of Bourcq (leader of the First Crusade) Bohemond of Taranto (leader of the First Crusade) Tancred (leader of the First Crusade) Raymond IV of Toulouse (leader of the First Crusade) Stephen, Count of Blois (leader of the First Crusade) Frederick Barbarossa (Holy Roman Emperor and Crusader) Raymond III of Tripoli (Crusader general) Raynald of Chatillon (Crusader general) Gerard de Ridefort (Grand Master of the Knights Templar ) Roger de Moulins (Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller ) Richard I of England (King of England , often referred as Richard the Lionhearted, known for his participation in the Third Crusade ) al-Afdal Shahanshah (Fatimid vizier]]) Saladin (Leader of the Muslims , known for his recapture of Jerusalem from the crusaders' hand) Boniface of Montferrat (leader of the Fourth Crusade ) Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor (leader of the Fifth Crusade and Sixth Crusade ) Hermann of Salza (Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights ) Genghis Khan (Great Khan of the Mongols ) Ögedei Khan (Great Khan of the Mongols ) Batu Khan (Mongolian conqueror) Kublai Khan (Great Khan of the Mongols , conqueror of China Alexander Nevsky (Prince of Novgorod , Grand Prince of Vladimir, saint and national hero of Russia ) Edward I of England (known as the Hammer of the Scots]]) William Wallace (Scottish Knight and freedom fighter) Robert the Bruce (Scottish King and freedom fighter) Khair ad Din (Also known as Barbarossa, an Admiral in the Ottoman Empire) Louis IX of France (leader of the Seventh Crusade and Eighth Crusade ) Edward III of England (English King in the Hundred Years War ) Edward the Black Prince , heir to the throne of England Roger de Flor (leader of the Catalan Company ) Mehmed II the Conqueror (Ottoman Sultan, conquered Constantinople in 1453) Mehmed Pasa Sokollu (Bosnian military leader, Ottoman Grand Vizier during the reign of Suleiman and Selim II ) Joan of Arc (National heroine of France and saint of Catholic Church ) El Cid (Spanish knight and hero) Tamerlane (Timur Lenk, Mongolian conqueror) King Henry V of England, a seasoned warrior at the age of sixteen Jan Zizka (Commander of Taborite Army in Bohemia 's Hussite Wars ) Suleiman the Magnificent (Sultan of the Ottoman Empire)
Early Modern Era
Napoleonic Wars until World War 2
World War 2 - 1990
After 1990
See also
Results from FactBites:
PGSA - Polish Military History (2430 words)
(Lists of cavalry and horse artillery officers and enlisted men killed as well as lists of cavalry and horse artillery officers and enlisted men awarded the Virtuti Militari .
Lists of prisoners are included by the year they were interned.
This regimental history of the 4th Infantry includes a list of officers and some enlisted men of the Duchy of Warsaw, Congress Kingdom and the Insurrection of 1830-1831.
Military history of the United States - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (6622 words)
As of 2006, the U.S. military consisted of an army, navy, air force and Marine Corps under the command of the United States Department of Defense.
In the early years of the British colonization of North America, military action in the colonies that would become United States were the result of conflicts with Native Americans, such as in the Pequot War of 1637 and King Philip's War in 1675.
MacArthur was later relieved of his command by Truman for insurbordination, and while some feared the conflict might spark another world war, negotiations beginning shortly after MacArthur's dismissal eventually resulted in a stalemate and armistice in 1953, with the two Koreas remaining divided at the 38th parallel.
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